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Zimbabwe
suffering inspires protest art
Agence- France- Presse
March 24, 2008
http://www.mywire.com/pubs/AFP/2008/03/24/6011099?&pbl=205
Born in 1980, Comrade
Fatso was once a proud member of Zimbabwe's "born-free generation".
Twenty-eight years on from independence, he feels only pain and
sadness for the former British colony.
Samm Farai Munro, better
known as Fatso, released a CD earlier this month to coincide with
the run-up to March 29 general elections, called "House of
Hunger", mirroring the crisis in the one-time model of post-colonial
success.
Viewed by some as one
of the most overtly revolutionary musical albums in recent years
after a series by exiled leading musician Thomas Mapfumo, the compilation
gives expression to the discontent and disillusionment pervading
the country.
Fatso sings about a house
of hunger fashioned out of "bricks of corruption, indoctrination,
green bombers (a derogatory reference to ruling party militias)
and hunger."
"Welcome towards
fear and anger," goes a verse on Fatso's album he composed
with a group named "Chabvondoka", local lingo for "all
hell has broken loose."
"Our dreams are
blistered, hear the blood of hope scrapped, ...those with open heads
(are) beaten and battered and left for the dead, hear activists'
wrists twisted".
He mocks "parliamentary
democracy where fat chefs sit in the kitchen cooking ...famine".
Fatso is one of the dozens
of Zimbabwean artists radically and creatively expressing sorrow
and anger over the economic and political crises rocking the former
Rhodesia, using theatre, music, poetry, dance and literature.
"It is a very loud
way of protest," said Fatso.
"I speak and stand
in defence of our people whose rights are being trampled on,"
says poet and radical trade unionist Raymond Majongwe, whose latest
album Dhiziri paChinhoyi (Diesel at Chinhoyi) caricatures President
Robert Mugabe's government for believing a woman who claimed to
have discovered diesel oozing from a rock in the northern town of
Chinhoyi.
"ZANU-PF (the ruling
party) is perpetrating brutalities and I speak about these injustices
without fear," he said.
At an international day
of poetry commemoration in the capital last week, Fortune King Rozvi
Muchuchuti recited a poem on the deteriorating rights standards
in the country.
"We walk sullenly
to the graveyard to bury the strength of our bearer cheques (local
currency). We saunter to the cemetery to bury the confidence of
our people, burying the pride of our Africanness."
"Napukeni"
(napkin or diaper), a song by one of the country's top dub-poets
Chirikure Chirikure was banned on public radio for metaphorically
calling for a change to the country's mess in the way a soiled diaper
is changed.
In a country where insulting
the president can earn one a jail term and street protests can be
brutally broken by riot police, artists are giving expression to
the growing anger.
Theatre performances
have been targeted by authorities infuriated by the open and stinging
attacks.
Anti-riot police
last year stormed a performance in the second city of Bulawayo,
driving out theatre goers who were watching a satire "The Good
President", which was inspired by police brutal attacks on
opposition leaders who had tried to stage a protest rally.
Late last year police
in the capital arrested the cast at the end of "The Final Push",
a play whose title was derived from a plan by the main opposition
to bombard Mugabe with protests until he loosens his stranglehold
on power.
The police made actors
repeat the performance more than 20 times while in custody, while
accusing them of being opposition activists hiding behind the mask
of art.
"There is direct
interference from the state with such plays being banned and people
chased out of theatres. We should not expect the leadership to give
us space," said Chirikure.
Authorities have blacklisted
several productions, but the artists won't be cowed from churning
out productions such as "All Systems out of Order", about
the country's crumbling infrastructure.
Last year, the Zimbabwe
Poets for Human Rights was launched by a group of young bards.
"With the economic
situation deteriorating, the human rights situation is getting worse
now... violations are getting worse day by day," said its coordinator
Robson Shoes.
But the hardships help
fan the artists' creative flames.
"The environment
is not conducive, people can't afford to buy books, live shows are
expensive for people and audiences are dwindling, but this fires
up our emotions up into more creations," said Chirikure.
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